Unless you have a non-Posix flavour of date you'll have the dickens of a time trying to work magic with date arithmetic. If all you want is the wall clock time (real time) that a process (script, or programme) took to run then try this:
What I have done in the past is to write a simple C programme that prints the current time as an integer and use that to capture the time before and after a series of commands. Not all that accurate, but if your commands are running for a few minutes then the time to load and execute the little programme twice can be neglected. It was also quicker to do that than to dork round with date and time when AT&T AST or GNU tools aren't available.
diff -yta file1 file2
#!/usr/abc/b/bin/perl5.6 | #!/usr/abc/b/bin/perl5.8
Notable thing about above line is "|" appears at 62nd position. When the same line is assigned in a variable in a ksh script, using
ss=$(diff -yta file1 file2)
it appears as ... (4 Replies)
Hello - I have a small diff script that checks 2 directories. It reports the difference in count such as wc -l, and also names the different files.
How should I get "ERROR: diff found . (host)" - when it actually finds a diff?
This is how I have written:
#!/bin/bash
... (10 Replies)
Dear experts,
I have an epoch time input file such as : -
1302451209564
1302483698948
1302485231072
1302490805383
1302519244700
1302492787481
1302505299145
1302506557022
1302532112140
1302501033105
1302511536485
1302512669550
I need the epoch time above to be converted into real... (4 Replies)
Hi ALL
I have a shell script named setUP in which i am sourcing one variable like
source var_name="CLASSPATH".
When i call it as ./setUP, it does not set the var_name variable. But when i call it like . ./setUP then var_name is set up. What is the difference between this two calls?
... (1 Reply)
Hi ALL
I have a shell script named setUP in which i am sourcing one variable like
source var_name="CLASSPATH".
When i call it as ./setUP, it does not set the var_name variable. But when i call it like . ./setUP then var_name is set up. What is the difference between this two calls?
... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am new to shell scripting.
please help me to find out the solution.
I need a script where we need to read the text file(consists of all file names) and get the file names one by one
and append the date suffix for each file name as 'yyyymmdd' .
Then search each file if exists... (1 Reply)
Hi Friends Need your expertise.
Command to check the difference and compare 2 files and remove lines . example
File1 is master copy and File2 is a slave copy . whenever i change, add or delete a record in File1 it should update the same in slave copy . Can you guide me how can i accomplish... (3 Replies)
HI All,
I am new to Unix shell scripts..
Could you please post the unix shell script for for the below request.,
There are two different tables(sample1, sample2) in different schemas(s_schema1, s_schema2).
Unix shell script to compare the columns of two different tables of two... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I have one file which contains time for request and response.
I want to calculate time difference in milliseconds for each line.
This file can contain 10K lines.
Sample file with 4 lines.
for first line.
Request Time: 15:23:45,255
Response Time: 15:23:45,258
Time diff... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Raza Ali
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
rrdp
RRDp(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation RRDp(3)NAME
RRDp - Attach RRDtool from within a perl script via a set of pipes;
SYNOPSIS
use RRDp
RRDp::start path to RRDtool executable
RRDp::cmd rrdtool commandline
$answer = RRD::read
$status = RRD::end
$RRDp::user, $RRDp::sys, $RRDp::real, $RRDp::error_mode, $RRDp::error
DESCRIPTION
With this module you can safely communicate with the RRDtool.
After every RRDp::cmd you have to issue an RRDp::read command to get RRDtools answer to your command. The answer is returned as a pointer,
in order to speed things up. If the last command did not return any data, RRDp::read will return an undefined variable.
If you import the PERFORMANCE variables into your namespace, you can access RRDtool's internal performance measurements.
use RRDp
Load the RRDp::pipe module.
RRDp::start path to RRDtool executable
start RRDtool. The argument must be the path to the RRDtool executable
RRDp::cmd rrdtool commandline
pass commands on to RRDtool. Check the RRDtool documentation for more info on the RRDtool commands.
Note: Due to design limitations, RRDp::cmd does not support the "graph -" command - use "graphv -" instead.
$answer = RRDp::read
read RRDtool's response to your command. Note that the $answer variable will only contain a pointer to the returned data. The
reason for this is, that RRDtool can potentially return quite excessive amounts of data and we don't want to copy this around in
memory. So when you want to access the contents of $answer you have to use $$answer which dereferences the variable.
$status = RRDp::end
terminates RRDtool and returns RRDtool's status ...
$RRDp::user, $RRDp::sys, $RRDp::real
these variables will contain totals of the user time, system time and real time as seen by RRDtool. User time is the time RRDtool
is running, System time is the time spend in system calls and real time is the total time RRDtool has been running.
The difference between user + system and real is the time spent waiting for things like the hard disk and new input from the Perl
script.
$RRDp::error_mode and $RRDp::error
If you set the variable $RRDp::error_mode to the value 'catch' before you run RRDp::read a potential ERROR message will not cause
the program to abort but will be returned in this variable. If no error occurs the variable will be empty.
$RRDp::error_mode = 'catch';
RRDp::cmd qw(info file.rrd);
print $RRDp::error if $RRDp::error;
EXAMPLE
use RRDp;
RRDp::start "/usr/local/bin/rrdtool";
RRDp::cmd qw(create demo.rrd --step 100
DS:in:GAUGE:100:U:U
RRA:AVERAGE:0.5:1:10);
$answer = RRDp::read;
print $$answer;
($usertime,$systemtime,$realtime) = ($RRDp::user,$RRDp::sys,$RRDp::real);
SEE ALSO
For more information on how to use RRDtool, check the manpages.
AUTHOR
Tobias Oetiker <tobi@oetiker.ch>
perl v5.12.1 2010-03-22 RRDp(3)